Ormus Trap

But I didn't use a donut magnet but rather 4 rectangular magnets about 1 by 2 inches
and 1/4 in thick. I placed them around the pipe in a square fashion and their
attraction for eachother held them in place.

I got some milky water very quickly by running the hose through it. It was a bit sweet too.

I was always discouraged about the complexity of most traps but this one is very simple,
and cost me 10 dollars (the magnets were $8; a foot of pvc pipe, the "T" and a foot of cord)
and about 5 minutes to make!
I didn't use clamps and hoses - just pipe that fit snugly together - no glue or anything, and
the pipe fits snugly inside a water bottle or 2-liter pop bottle which I use for recipient.

Hi Sol this is my setup, I built this a few years back. That's great to hear you got milky water with such a cheap and fast setup, even though mine seems more complicated, yours is probably superior due to the thinner walls and closer proximity of the magnets to the good water outflow, my setup utilizes the vortex phenomenon, which was hard to cut a slot at an angle in the pipe and design it where all the water would be forced through that slot so it could enter at extreme velocities and start rotating. These are true levitation traps, did you know Jim started this whole thing?

Hi Sol this is my setup, I built this a few years back. That's great to hear you got milky water with such a cheap and fast setup, even though mine seems more complicated, yours is probably superior due to the thinner walls and closer proximity of the magnets to the good water outflow, my setup utilizes the vortex phenomenon, which was hard to cut a slot at an angle in the pipe and design it where all the water would be forced through that slot so it could enter at extreme velocities and start rotating. These are true levitation traps, did you know Jim started this whole thing?

I am not seeing your pictures, I wonder what is wrong? Like your explanation of Solomon levi simple trap.is it possible then that his might be a better design.he got milky water so quickly,something which I have seen from only one person using a vortex tube with dozens of magnets.

But I didn't use a donut magnet but rather 4 rectangular magnets about 1 by 2 inches
and 1/4 in thick. I placed them around the pipe in a square fashion and their
attraction for eachother held them in place.

I got some milky water very quickly by running the hose through it. It was a bit sweet too.

I was always discouraged about the complexity of most traps but this one is very simple,
and cost me 10 dollars (the magnets were $8; a foot of pvc pipe, the "T" and a foot of cord)
and about 5 minutes to make!
I didn't use clamps and hoses - just pipe that fit snugly together - no glue or anything, and
the pipe fits snugly inside a water bottle or 2-liter pop bottle which I use for recipient.